Conférence de Ray Siemens (U de Victoria)
9 septembre 2024 • 15h30 17h00
Salle C-2059, 3150 rue Jean Brillant, Université de Montréal
Dans le cadre de la transition du Digital Humanities Summer Institute (DHSI), qui aura désormais lieu à l’Université de Montréal à partir de 2025, notre centre est heureux d’accueillir Ray Siements pour sa conférence intitulée « The Digital Humanities Summer Institute — in situ and in Positive Transition » :
The Digital Humanities Summer Institute (DHSI) was founded in 2001 on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada – since its inception serving as a community-based, annual training institute for the development and sharing of digital humanities skills, tools, and approaches. As the largest digital humanities curriculum in the world, DHSI mobilizes and leverages extant and ongoing activities across the arts and humanities and produces computationally capable, highly qualified personnel. This focus on professional and community development carries forward benefits, research priorities, and knowledge output in the social sciences and humanities to key areas both within and beyond academia. The institute now draws hundreds of participants annually from academic, government, business, and cultural heritage sectors and DHSI continues to support this large and varied community of practice. The engagement of multiple communities during DHSI significantly encourages the growth of a comprehensive, digital ecosystem constituted by many different sectors and practitioners across career levels. This talk will explore elements of the past and present of DHSI, as we look toward positive transition to Montreal for 2025.
Bio: Ray Siemens (FRSC) is Distinguished Professor in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Victoria, Canada, in English and Computer Science, and past Canada Research Chair in Humanities Computing; in 2019, he was also Leverhulme Visiting Professor at U Loughborough and, 2019-22, Global Innovation Chair in Digital Humanities in the Centre for 21st Century Humanities at U Newcastle. He is founding editor of the electronic scholarly journal Early Modern Literary Studies, and his publications include, among others, Blackwell’s Companion to Digital Humanities (2004, 2015 with Schreibman and Unsworth), the Companion to Digital Literary Studies(2007, with Schreibman), A Social Edition of the Devonshire MS (2012, 2015; MRTS/Iter & Wikibooks, with Crompton et al.), Literary Studies in the Digital Age (2014; MLA, with Price), Doing Digital Humanities (2017; Routledge, with Crompton and Lane), and The Lyrics of the Henry VIII MS (2018; RETS). He directs the Implementing New Knowledge Environments project, the Digital Humanities Summer Institute (with Michael Sinatra), and the Electronic Textual Cultures Lab, recently serving as a member of governing council for the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, as Vice President / Director of the Canadian Federation of the Humanities and Social Sciences (for Research Dissemination), Chair of the MLA Committee on Scholarly Editions, and Chair of the international Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations.
Ce contenu a été mis à jour le 14 août 2024 à 11 h 25 min.